Showing results from Unthank Books

Words And Women: Four is the latest showcase collection of short prose by women writers from the East of England. The memoir, fiction, and creative non-fiction included reflects the brilliance, boldness and depth of women's contemporary writing.

Words And Women: Three is the third showcase collection of short prose by women writers in the East of England. The memoir, fiction, and creative non-fiction inside reflect the brilliance, boldness and depth of women's contemporary writing in the region.

In a truly post-post-modern tour de force of literary fiction, MERIDIAN reveals the inner monologue of a successful contemporary architect. Following threads, and elaborating on snapshots of the world he sees around him, it builds into a discourse on modern life, a distillation of the demotic and the demonic.

In 2012, Unthank Books published David Madden's masterful suggested ending of Dicken's unfinished last novel. Since then readers all over the world have been discovering what might have happened to poor Edwin. Was his uncle Jasper responsible? Was the necktie or Rosa's ring the chief clue? Was mesmerism really involved?

In Manchester Fleur is drifting through life haunted by her murdered boyfriend Daniel. In Japan Chinatsu is trying to escape a passionless marriage to Yugi Hamogoshi, a man with a secret who won't let her go. Fleur and Chinatsu used to be schoolfriends. Fleur and Chinatsu had a bond. Fleur and Chinatsu had dreams. This is the story of what happens before they can be together again. A...

Words And Women: Two is the second showcase collection of short prose by women writers in the East of England and the first appearance in print of four specially-commissioned texts for the page and performance, 'About.'

Words And Women One, edited by Lynne Bryan and Belona Greenwood, is the inaugural showcase collection of short prose by women writers in the East of England. The memoir, fiction and creative non-fiction inside reflects the brilliance and boldness of women's contemporary writing in the regions.